LATE BREEDING-SEASON DEFINITIVE PRE-BASIC MOLT BY MALES, AND LATE
BREEDING SEASON BROOD CARE BY FEMALES, IN CENTRAL CALIFORNIA WILSON'S
WARBLERS
Abstract
Abstract. I made late breeding season (after 1 July) observations of a
central California population of Wilson’s Warbler, Cardellina pusilla,
over nine breeding seasons. I sighted males in definitive prebasic molt
from 4 July in 2007 through 1 September in 1999. Possibly all
territorial males molted on their breeding territories, and molt lasted
a maximum of 46 days. Following prebasic molt, territorial males engaged
in subdued “post molt singing,” which lasted 14 days in one male, but
usually no more than seven days, and was last heard on 6 September in
1999. I sighted no female in definitive prebasic molt, nor in bright
basic plumage, during the study. Of 12 color-banded females sighted
after 22 July, I confirmed 11 had been in late breeding season
uniparental brood care. Possibly all resident females not engaged in
late uniparental brood care vacated their breeding territories earlier,
and before resident males. They presumably underwent prebasic molt at
later times and locations not known. Remaining late nesting females must
have molted much later than resident males, and likely later than early
departing resident females, and at unknown locations. I last sighted
uniparental brood tending females still in dull alternate plumage on 26
and 29 August respectively, whereas some males had completed prebasic
molt by 13 August. Three unique study findings are the occurrence of
male post molt singing, a male/female difference in location of prebasic
molt, and a likely dichotomy of prebasic molt timing between females
leaving their breeding grounds early, and those remaining in uniparental
brood care.